Comprehensive Measures Would Increase Access to Voting Facilities, Housing and
Transportation for People with Disabilities

Speaker Silver, joined by Assemblywoman Michele Titus, addressed the Annual Legislative Disabilities
Awareness Day luncheon in Albany, noting that later in the day the Assembly would take up a package of bills aimed at addressing the
many daily challenges the disabled face. Silver and Titus, chair of the Task Force on People with Disabilities, also spoke about the
Assembly’s commitment to helping disabled New Yorkers as they live, work and contribute to the state.

Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver and Minority Leader Brian M. Kolb announced today the Assembly’s passage of a
comprehensive legislative package aimed at ensuring that men, women and children with disabilities receive opportunities for
self-empowerment that all New Yorkers expect and deserve. Today’s floor action was part of the Assembly’s annual observance
of Legislative Disabilities Awareness Day.

The Assembly leaders commended Assembly Mental Health, Mental Retardation and Developmental Disabilities Committee
Chair Peter Rivera, Assembly Task Force on People with Disabilities Chair Michele Titus and Assembly Mental Health, Mental
Retardation and Developmental Disabilities Committee Ranking Minority Member Tom McKevitt for their dedication and direction
to these very important issues regarding New Yorkers with disabilities.

"Year after year, we work hard to bring forth legislation to ensure fairness, justice, and opportunity for New Yorkers with
disabilities," said Silver (D-Manhattan). "On this very important day, the Assembly sought to address day-to-day
issues faced by thousands of disabled residents, workers, commuters and consumers of New York State. We have long fought to
honor the work of the disability community and it is our hope that this legislative package will continue to assist them as they
live, work and contribute to our state."

"Legislative Disabilities Awareness Day provides an opportunity for us, as elected officials, to learn about the emerging
issues facing New Yorkers with disabilities and use that knowledge to craft legislation to address them," said Assembly
Minority Leader Brian M. Kolb (R,I,C-Canandaigua). "It's so important for us to understand the needs of the disabled
community so we can provide them with the means to reach their goals. I'm pleased to see the great turnout we've had here
today and I'm proud to join my Assembly colleagues in hosting this meaningful occasion."

"It is once again an honor to be co-sponsoring Legislative Disabilities Awareness Day as Chair of the Task Force. This is a
very important and productive day because it allows us to unite advocates, service providers, people with disabilities and their
families and friends to improve the lives of people living with disabilities all across the state," Titus (D-Queens) said.
"As elected officials, our goal is to defend the rights of people with disabilities to ensure they receive fair and equal
integration, independence and accessibility, day in and day out."

"The Assembly has a long tradition of providing needed services and support systems to New Yorker's with
disabilities," Rivera (D-Bronx) said. "From electoral reform to advocating for equal opportunity, we continuously
work to ensure that men, women and children with disabilities receive the same benefits and opportunity that all New Yorkers
expect and deserve."

"It's great that we can devote an entire session day to advocate for better legislation for those living with disabilities and at
the same time promote their accomplishments," McKevitt (R,C,I-East Meadow) said. "I'm proud that we're focusing
on the positive triumphs of people with disabilities and I'm consistently encouraged by the stories I hear of the barriers individuals
have overcome on a daily basis."

In order to improve voter access, the Assembly package includes legislation that would require polling locations to comply with the
guidelines of the Americans with Disabilities Act (A.584-A/Cahill). Another bill also includes legislation that would
require that Braille ballots be produced for blind or visually impaired voters who request them
(A.3738/Koon). The Assembly package also includes legislation that would expand the number of available
handicapped accessible polling places by requiring owners of buildings who receive public benefits to make space available
(A.5707/Weinstein).

Another measure included in the Assembly package would ensure the safety of people with disabilities living and working in
high-rise buildings, by requiring such structures to adopt emergency evacuation plans that specifically pertain to the disability
community (A.7852/Titus). Additional legislation would expand housing availability for people with disabilities, ensuring that
housing programs and activities that receive federal financial assistance comply with Section 504 of the Federal Rehabilitation
Act of 1973 (A.7851/Titus).

Other bills included in the Assembly package would:

Require ATMs to use both audio and visual systems of relaying messages to its customers, therefore providing equal
access for all individuals (A.4766-A/Weisenberg);

Require gas stations that provide both full and self service to provide full service to people with disabilities with a valid New
York state handicapped parking permit at the self-service price, between 7:00 am and 7:00 pm
(A.629/Paulin);

Clarify the scope of protections against discrimination on the basis of disability in services provided by public entities in
New York State by making the State Human Rights Law consistent with Title II of the Americans with Disabilities Act.
(A.781-B/Paulin);

Require that the services of sign language interpreters be made available upon the request of a hearing impaired individual
at public hearings and meetings (A.2102/Wright);

Require that the access aisles of handicapped parking spaces be marked with signs and diagonal stripes to further deter
people from parking in such spaces (A.7848/Latimer);

Require access aisles of handicapped accessible parking spaces to be at least eight feet wide to ensure that they are
wide enough for people with disabilities to enter and exit their vehicles (A.7849/Lavine);

Require the Department of Health to adopt regulations concerning patients and responsible persons who are hearing
impaired which would require all hospitals, except when not medically feasible, to ascertain at the time of admission whether a
patient or responsible person needs an interpreter or an assistive listening device and his or her preferred method of
communication (A.7853 Weisenberg);

Waive the state's sovereign immunity to liability under the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) of 1990 and certain other
federal acts (A.3651/Lifton);

Establish the Metropolitan Transportation Authority Riders' Council for People with Disabilities
(A.3954/Kellner); and

Require counties to maintain a registry of residents with disabilities for the purpose of locating, evacuating and providing
shelter for them during a disaster situation (A.520/Destito).

Silver noted that this year's recipient of the "Dr. Henry Viscardi, Jr." Advocacy Award was presented to Harvey
Rosenthal, executive director, New York Association of Psychiatric Rehabilitation Services (NYAPRS). Silver also congratulated
the many winning artists and all of the children who participated in Assembly Member Michael Cusick's "Legislative
Disabilities Awareness Day" poster contest.